Current-meter (cm
) instruments determine directions from onboard compasses,
so interpreting velocity components in geographical coordinates requires that
magnetic declination be taken into account. This is what the present
function does (see “Details”).
# S4 method for cm
applyMagneticDeclination(
object = "oce",
declination = 0,
debug = getOption("oceDebug")
)
A cm object, adjusted as outlined in “Details”.
a cm object.
numeric value holding magnetic declination in degrees, positive for clockwise from north.
an integer specifying whether debugging information is
to be printed during the processing. This is a general parameter that
is used by many oce
functions. Generally, setting debug=0
turns off the printing, while higher values suggest that more information
be printed. If one function calls another, it usually reduces the value of
debug
first, so that a user can often obtain deeper debugging
by specifying higher debug
values.
Dan Kelley
The returned value is a copy of object
that has been modified in 4 ways.
(1) the horizontal components of velocity are rotated clockwise by
declination
degrees. (2) If the object holds heading values, then
declination
is added to them. (3) The north
item in the metadata
slot
is set to "geographic"
, and a warning is issued if this was also the value
in object
. (4) The declination
item in the metadata
slot is set to
the value supplied to this function.
Use magneticField()
to determine the declination,
inclination and intensity at a given spot on the world, at a given time.
Other things related to magnetism:
applyMagneticDeclination()
,
applyMagneticDeclination,adp-method
,
applyMagneticDeclination,adv-method
,
applyMagneticDeclination,oce-method
,
magneticField()
Other things related to cm data:
[[,cm-method
,
[[<-,cm-method
,
as.cm()
,
cm
,
cm-class
,
plot,cm-method
,
read.cm()
,
rotateAboutZ()
,
subset,cm-method
,
summary,cm-method